OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff JP Morgan Chase Bank brings this action on behalf of a syndicate of commercial banks (“the Banks”) against various officers, directors, and employees of telecommunications company Global Crossing Ltd. (“GC”) in connection with a series of loans extended to GC between August 17, 2001, and September 28, 2001, pursuant to' a credit agreement entered into in August 2000 (the “Credit Agreement”). Certain defendants previously moved for dismissal of, or in the alternative, for summary judgment against, the plaintiffs’ claims. The motion to dismiss was granted as to plaintiffs’ negligent mis
*250
representation claims (fifth, sixth, and seventh causes of action), and denied as to plaintiffs’ fraud claims (first through fourth causes of action), while the motion for summary judgment on the surviving claims was denied.
See JP Morgan Chase Bank v. Winnick,
Details of plaintiffs’ allegations of fraud are set forth in this Court’s prior opinion. Id. at 396-97. Briefly stated, the Credit Agreement authorized GC to draw down funds from a credit facility, provided a GC officer certified that the company was in compliance with the covenants and other terms of the Credit Agreement at the time of each borrowing. Compliance, in turn, was measured in part by GC’s maintenance of a low ratio of debt to earnings (“Total Leverage Ratio”). The Banks allege that GC artificially kept the Total Leverage Ratio within bounds by inflating its earnings through bogus swaps with other telecommunications providers for capacity on their respective fiber-optic networks. These swaps typically involved the sale of capacity to another provider in exchange for that provider’s agreement to purchase capacity from GC of an equivalent stated value, thus permitting GC to book revenue (and deflate the Total Leverage Ratio through increased earnings) from the sale, even though the capacity purchased was unnecessary and the income generated by the sale was wholly artificial. The Banks allege that inclusion of this artificial income in GC’s earnings rendered GC’s certifications of compliance with the Credit Agreement false, perpetrating a fraud on the Banks in that they were deceived into permitting GC to draw down funds to which they were not entitled.
For the sake of these motions, Armstrong, in-house counsel at GC (Comply 33), and Gorton, GC’s then-general counsel (id. ¶ 21), concede that the Banks have adequately alleged a fraud in connection with the transactions and representations described above. But these defendants move to dismiss the Complaint for failure to adequately allege the claims against them with the particularity required under Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b). The motions will be denied.
DISCUSSION
On a motion to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), the Court must accept as true all well-pleaded factual allegations in the Complaint and view them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, drawing all reasonable inferences in its favor.
Leeds v. Meltz,
Ordinarily, a complaint will not be dismissed for failure to state a claim “unless it appears beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his claim that would entitle him to relief.”
Conley v. Gibson, 355
U.S. 41, 45-46,
I. Aiding and Abetting Fraud
To establish liability under New York law for aiding and abetting fraud, the Banks must prove: “(1) the existence of a fraud; (2) a defendant’s knowledge of the fraud; and (3) that the defendant provided substantial assistance to advance the fraud’s commission.”
Filler,
A. Actual Knowledge
The knowledge requirement of an aiding and abetting fraud claim is satisfied by alleging actual knowledge of the underlying fraud.
4
See Kolbeck v. LIT
*253
America, Inc.,
First, the specific allegations against Armstrong and Gorton are made in the context of an underlying fraud, which the Banks have alleged was massive, and the objectives and mechanics of which they likewise allege were widely known within GC. The Banks allege that GC management pressured employees to meet quarterly revenue targets by “clos[ing] any and all possible deals, even if they had to be reciprocal, even if they would not be profitable or beneficial to [GC], and even if [GC] had no defensible business purpose for acquiring the additional capacity,” (Comply 172) and that by early 2001, many within GC were already expressing concern about reliance on swaps.
{Id.
¶ 181.) The network engineers in particular had to be “sold” on the strategy because their help was needed in supplying post-hoc “business cases”
{ie.,
“tool[s] prepared by sales, marketing, technical, finance, and operations people to support planning and decision-making ... generally designed to analyze financial and operational consequences of a particular decision,”
id.
¶ 87) for the swaps that management had already approved.
{Id.
¶¶ 181-189.) The relevance of meeting revenue targets to maintaining access to the credit facility provided by the Banks was also allegedly well-known: As detailed in the Complaint, emails exchanged among various defendants in May 2001 referencing the debt ratio provided for in the Credit Agreement led to the subsequent execution of allegedly improper swaps at a “frantic pace,” fueled by a change in the compensation structure for “upper management paid salespeople” that rewarded swaps and straight sales in an equivalent manner.
{Id.
¶¶ 228-234.) Exhortations to salespeople to simulate revenue by concluding reciprocal transactions continued and by the end of summer 2001, the Banks allege that “the lack of business purpose underlying the reciprocal transactions, the impropriety of the accounting methods
*254
employed, and [GC’s] vulnerability to regulatory -scrutiny, was [sic] well-known within the Company”
(id.
¶ 288), supporting this allegation with references to emails and calls among various GC employees continuing to query or express concern about the legitimacy of the swaps
(id.
¶ 288-291). Armstrong correctly notes that these allegations about what was known within the company or to other defendants can not suffice on their own to satisfy the requirement of Rule 9(b) that allegations be pled with specificity as to each defendant. (Armstrong Mem. 9.)
See Di Vittorio,
Second, those specific allegations, particularly when viewed against this backdrop, are sufficient to give rise to an inference of Armstrong and Gorton’s actual knowledge of the fraud. Armstrong is identified in the Complaint as “Counsel at [GC] during the relevant period. Armstrong actively participated in negotiating transactions and drafting contracts for the Improper Swaps. Armstrong assisted the fraud on ... the Banks.” (ComplJ 33.) While this does not provide a factual basis for Armstrong’s knowledge of the fraud, the Complaint goes on to reference three emails of which Armstrong was a recipient. The emails, the full texts of which were submitted in opposition to this motion and as documents referenced within the Complaint are thus properly considered,
Brass v. Am. Film Techs., Inc.,
Armstrong argues that these emails can and should be read differently. She points out that “corporations are supposed to do deals that enable them to hit their revenue targets,” and argues that the third email specifying a repurchase price of actual amount paid substantiates a legitimate business case for the Qwest transaction, i.e., providing GC with the option in the future of exchanging unwanted, purchased capacity for capacity it did want. Finally, she points to language in yet another email in which she explains this as her understanding of the business purpose of the *255 Qwest transaction. (Armstrong Reply Mem. 6-7; Miller Decl. (Armstrong) Ex. F, at 2.) Perhaps Wright’s three emails can and will be read by the factfinder in the manner suggested by Armstrong, but at this early stage of the litigation it is sufficient that they can also be read to inform her of the fraudulent purpose of the transactions. A more substantial factual basis is not required to give rise to a strong inference of Armstrong’s actual knowledge. 5
The Banks have marshaled an even more extensive array of facts in the Complaint which give rise to a strong inference of Gorton’s actual knowledge. (P. Gorton Opp. Mem. 13-14.) Gorton argues that these facts, and particularly his receipt, as general counsel, of a letter from Roy L. Olofson, a former vice president of finance at GC, detailing the booking of swaps as cash transactions and the resulting inflation of revenue (CompLIffl 301-304), cannot support an inference of his actual knowledge. Gorton is correct that the Olofson letter, showing at most that Gorton was put on notice of potential misconduct, does not suffice; suspicion, without confirmation, does not satisfy the actual knowledge requirement for a claim of aiding and abetting fraud.
See Ryan v. Hunton & Williams,
No. 99 Civ. 5938(JG),
But the Banks have alleged other facts which, taken together could show not just what Gorton should or might have known, but what he actually knew. According to the Complaint, Gorton knew about the revenue shortage and its impact on meeting the covenants in the Credit Agreement (Compl.lffl 219-220, 228); he knew swaps were being conducted to meet end-of-quarter revenue targets (see, e.g., id. ¶ 176) (citing Gorton’s congressional testimony about the first quarter 360Networks swap) and forwarded an email containing a list of potential swaps to be closed to “help make the $650M target” to Gary Winnick, GC founder and board of director co-chairman, adding in the text of his own message the comment “[g]iven that we are at the end of the quarter, Patrick [Joggerst, GC’s president of carrier sales] rightly believes that the only deals that we should focus on at this critical moment are the IRU deals on the table” (Id. ¶ 242; Miller Decl. (Gorton) Ex. C, at 1); he knew about the need to alter compensation to incentivize GC’s salespeople to close swaps (CompW 234); and he knew a swap partner’s accounting firm had balked at signing off on one swap. (Id. ¶ 294.)
Gorton argues that it would have been inconsistent for him to have been complicit in the fraud, and yet to have objected to the lack of business justification for the 360Networks swap (id. ¶¶ 176-180), to have expressed concern over changing the structure of sales incentives (id. IT 234), and to have hired outside legal counsel to *256 investigate Olofson’s allegations. (Gorton Mem. 12-13; Gorton Reply Mem. 4-5.) But this is an argument for the factfinder. The Complaint adequately alleges facts giving rise to a strong inference of Gor-ton’s actual knowledge.
B. Substantial Assistance
Plaintiffs must also plead facts describing the substantial assistance defendants provided to the fraud. “A defendant provides substantial assistance only if [she] affirmatively assists, helps conceal, or by virtue of failing to act when required to do so enables [the fraud] to proceed.”
Nigerian Nat'l Petroleum Corp. v. Citibank, N.A,
No. 98 Civ. 4960(MBM),
1. Armstrong
The allegations as to Armstrong’s participation in the fraud are thin. The Complaint alleges no more than that she “actively participated in negotiating transactions and drafting contracts for the Improper Swaps.” (ComplA 33.) Contrary to the position they adopt in their briefing, the Banks are not entitled to rely on their additional general allegations that the “fraud defendants” encouraged or even required the use of improper swaps to inflate revenue. (P. Armstrong Opp. Mem. 16— 17; Compl. ¶¶ 78, 162.) These allegations are pressed at too broad a level to satisfy Rule 9(b) — there are seventeen “fraud defendants” (Comply 4) and it is not clear to which subset of “fraud defendants” these particular allegations are addressed. The specific allegations against Armstrong, in contrast, make no mention of any role in inducing the transactions, but rather state her role in negotiating and papering the transactions.
*257
Armstrong primarily argues that this role cannot be considered substantial assistance, because negotiating and drafting contracts were her typical duties as in-house counsel, and she cites cases in which tasks routinely performed in the course of business — such as maintaining bank accounts and authorizing transfers — were held not to constitute substantial assistance.
See Ryan,
The aiding and abetting conduct alleged in the cases Armstrong cites to the Court, consisting almost entirely of the provision of banking services to account holders, is too different from the conduct alleged here to be instructive, and Armstrong’s argument (and the Banks response) overstates the relevance of the whether the transactions were routine. The critical test is not, as Armstrong would have it, whether the alleged aiding and abetting conduct was routine, but whether it made a substantial contribution to the perpetration of the fraud. More instructive in this connection is the injunction of the district court in
Primavera Familienstifung v. Askin,
Far from being a remote servicer of the primary violator, Armstrong is alleged to have been directly involved in bringing about — including negotiating — transactions, which while not themselves necessarily fraudulent, are alleged to have been carried out solely for the purpose of inflating revenue and thus could reasonably be understood as a proximate cause leading foreseeably to defrauding the Banks. Whether Armstrong’s actual contribution on any given transaction was sufficient to be a proximate cause of the Banks’ losses is ultimately a fact issue to be resolved after fuller development of the record, but the Banks are entitled to present proof of the substantial assistance they have adequately alleged. Thus, the Banks have met their burden under Rules 12(b)(6) and 9(b) as to their aiding and abetting claim against Armstrong.
2. Gorton
In contrast to Armstrong, Gorton claims not that the Complaint alleges he did too little to constitute substantial assistance, but, in effect, that he did too much *258 in direct opposition to the fraud. The Complaint is replete with references to Gorton, but in their opposing papers, the Banks rely on very little to show that Gorton substantially assisted the fraud, identifying only Gorton’s attendance at meetings and receipt of emails in which the fraudulent scheme was allegedly discussed, and, as described above, his forwarding of an email to Winniek containing a list of swaps GC desired to close that quarter. (P. Gorton Opp. Mem. 15 — 17.) These are very thin allegations indeed, and Gorton points to the many ways in 'which he claims he “actively discouraged the allegedly fraudulent acts.” (Gorton Reply Mem. 6 — 9, citing his vocal opposition to the 360 Networks transaction; his challenge to altering the compensation scheme to reward salespeople equally for reciprocal and non-reciprocal transactions; and his initiation of an investigation, including involving outside counsel, following receipt of Olofson’s letter.)
Although Gorton’s attendance at meetings and receipt of emails at which or in which the fraud was discussed strongly support an inference of knowledge, they cannot suffice to show his assistance to the fraud. Mere presence, and passive receipt of email, cannot, by definition, constitute affirmative assistance.
See In re Liquidation of Union Indem., Ins. Co. of New York,
Moreover, the Banks point to one affirmative action in particular on Gorton’s part which they claim constitutes substantial assistance' — his solicitation of Win-nick’s help in closing swaps identified as crucial to making revenue targets by forwarding a list of desirable transactions, some of which were reciprocal, and accordingly the kind of transactions claimed to be at the heart of the alleged fraudulent scheme. (Id. ¶ 242; Miller Decl. (Gorton) Ex. C, at 1.) Gorton suggests that no fact of assistance can be read into Gorton’s forwarding of this email, given that “a [cjompany’s desire to meet quarterly revenue projections is hardly extraordinary in American business.” (Gorton Mem. 16— 17.) But that a particular fact can give rise to conflicting inferences does not justify dismissing a complaint at this stage of the proceedings, provided the facts can give rise to an inference of wrongful conduct. Similarly, while Gorton points to the many steps he claims to have taken to oppose the fraud, some of these are themselves subject to conflicting inferences. As one example, although Gorton opposed the 360 Networks swap, the language he used — at least as quoted in the Complaint (id. ¶ 179) — tends to show that he did so because it was risky, not necessarily because it was fraudulent. The Court need not resolve these conflicting inferences, nor decide whether the facts alleged in the Complaint ultimately prove that Gorton’s *259 actions are a sufficiently proximate cause of the Banks’ losses to raise Gorton’s liability. Instead, on a motion to dismiss, it is sufficient that the Banks have set forth with particularity actions they allege constitute Gorton’s substantial assistance to the fraud, and that these actions — assisting in the transactions at the core of the fraudulent scheme — are reasonably alleged to ’ be a proximate cause of the Banks’ losses. Accordingly, the aiding and abetting claim against Gorton survives his Rule 9(b) and 12(b)(6) challenge.
II. Conspiracy to Commit Fraud
The Banks also bring claims against Armstrong and Gorton for conspiracy to commit fraud. To adequately plead claims for conspiracy to commit fraud under New York law, in addition to pleading the underlying fraud, the Banks must allege the following with the required specificity as to each defendant: “(1) an agreement among two or more parties, (2) a common objective, (3) acts in furtherance of the objective, and (4) knowledge.”
Filler,
CONCLUSION
The motions of defendants Jackie Armstrong and James C. Gorton to dismiss the Banks’ claims of aiding and abetting and conspiracy to commit fraud are denied. Although the allegations in the Complaint are sufficient to survive these motions, the claims do not strike the Court as particularly potent as to these individual defendants. Many of the facts alleged in the Complaint are susceptible to conflicting interpretations and robust dispute as to whether they prove anything of much significance with regard to the knowledge and involvement of these defendants in the fraud alleged here. Moreover, it is doubtful whether these defendants can make a substantial contribution to compensating the Banks, even if their liability is ultimately established. If sufficient evidence can be mustered to survive a summary judgment challenge, the Banks would nonetheless be well-advised to consider whether chasing multiple individual defendants on what appear to be weak claims is worth the candle.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court dismissed plaintiffs’ seventh cause of action as to all defendants, not just those who joined in the motion. Accordingly, the seventh cause of action has already been dismissed against Armstrong and Gorton, and the only surviving causes of action against these defendants are plaintiffs’ third (aiding and abetting fraud) and fourth (conspiracy to commit fraud) claims.
. Armstrong argues that on a motion to dismiss a fraud plaintiff is entitled to only the "most plausible of competing inferences,” instead of the ordinary Rule 12(b)(6) standard of "all reasonable inferences” where allegations of scienter subject to Rule 9(b) are concerned. (Armstrong Reply Mem. 2.) In support of this proposition, Armstrong cites to
Bond Opportunity Fund v. Unilab Corp.,
No. 99 Civ. 11074(JSM),
While the Second Circuit has equated its "strong inference" requirement under Rule 9(b) with that contained in the PSLRA,
see, e.g., Novak v. Kasaks,
. The Banks claim that Rule 9(b) does not apply to conspiracy to commit fraud claims because conspiracy claims are "properly measured under the more liberal pleading requirements of Rule 8(a),” "apart from the underlying acts of fraud."
Andre Emmerich Gallery, Inc. v. Segre,
No. 96 Civ. 889(CSH),
. The Banks and Armstrong skirmish over whether anything less than actual knowledge suffices to make out a claim for aiding and abetting fraud. In addition to their briefing on the issue, the Court has received two letters from counsel for Armstrong and one from counsel for the Banks. Counsel for Armstrong initially wrote to draw the Court’s attention to a recent opinion postdating the briefing on the motion and stating the actual knowledge standard for aiding and abetting fraud.
See In re WorldCom. Inc. Securities Litigation,
The Court need not resolve the question of whether to consider the SEC testimony, because, for reasons stated below, the Court finds that the Banks' Complaint adequately alleges facts giving rise to an inference of Armstrong’s actual knowledge. Moreover, it is clear that actual knowledge, and not recklessness, is the controlling legal standard. The "knowledge” element of an aiding and abetting fraud claim is not identical to the scienter required for the underlying fraud claim. And while the latter may be adequately alleged under Rule 9(b) by providing a factual basis which give rises to a "strong inference” of fraud, including "facts that constitute strong circumstantial evidence of ... recklessness,”
Shields v. Citytrust Bancorp., Inc.,
. Armstrong argues in the alternative that the Banks’ claims should be dismissed as to her with regard to all non-Qwest transactions, given that the emails on which the Banks rely relate only to Qwest swaps. (Armstrong Reply Mem. 8 n. 7.) This argument is unavailing. On a motion to dismiss all reasonable infer-enees are to be drawn in favor of the plaintiff, and it is not unreasonable to infer Armstrong's broader knowledge about the overall fraudulent scheme from her receipt of emails about particular transactions which are not alleged to be materially different from the other transactions at the heart of that scheme.
. This Court has some doubt about whether "substantial assistance” can be equated with proximate cause. A person can make a meaningful contribution to a fraudulent scheme without being understood to have legally "caused” the scheme or its results. In the criminal law usage from which the concept is derived, for example, one may be guilty of aiding and abetting based on conduct that would not likely be sufficient to constitute a proximate cause of the criminal result; an accomplice to murder could rarely be found guilty as a principal who himself proximately caused the victim’s death. However, the Second Circuit has utilized the "proximate cause” standard in the context of aiding and abetting securities fraud.
See Edwards & Hanly v. Wells Fargo Sec. Clearance Corp.,
